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Aug. 16, 2024
Print | PDFSeptember 5, 2024, 12 p.m.
Maureen Forrester Recital Hall
String Quartet in F major by Sergio Prokofiev (1891-1953)
I. Allegro
Penderecki String Quartet:
Jeremy Bell, violin
Jerzy Kaplanek, violin
Christine Vlajk, viola
Katie Schaikjer, cello
Maang (Loon 2006) by Barbara Assiginaak (b. 1966)
Barbara Assiginaak, pipigwan
Valse Vertigo by Patrick Roux, (b. 1962)
Daniel Ramjattan, guitar
Concerto for Oboe, Op. 7 by Clémence de Grandval (1828-1907)
I. Allegro Moderato
Ari Cohen Mann, oboe
Beth Ann de Sousa, piano
Sonata in F #1 by Pietro Baldasare (1683-1768) for piccolo trumpet and strings
I. Allegro
II. Grave
III. Allegro
Guy Few, trumpet
Penderecki String Quartet
The Empty Song from Love by Libby Larsen (after 1950)
Kimberly Barber, vocals
Anna Ronai, piano
Brennan Connolly, percussion
Wild Nightingale for Solo Beatbox Flute by Brandy Hudelson (b.1980)
Sophie Lanthier, flute
Te Vas Milonga by Abel Fleury (1903-1958)
Demian Kogutek, guitar
She Danced in the Rain by Cait Nishimura (b. 1991)
Jonathan Rowsell, tuba
Stephanie Mara, piano
Brahms in Salsa by Tal Zilber
Marnie Van Weelden and Rebekah Jordan-Miller, piano
We ask that patrons take photos only during intermission and/or after the show and refrain from recording audio or video unless otherwise announced at the beginning of the show.
Visit our Theatre Visitors' Guide for more information to support your visit.
We would like to acknowledge that Wilfrid Laurier University and its campuses are located on the shared traditional territory of the Neutral, Anishnaabe (Anish-nah-bay) and Haudenosaunee (Hoe-den-no-show-nee) peoples. This land is part of the Dish with One Spoon Treaty between the Haudenosaunee and Anishnaabe peoples and symbolizes the agreement to share, protect our resources and not to engage in conflict. From the Haldimand Proclamation of Oct. 25, 1784 this territory is described as: “six miles deep from each side of the river (Grand River) beginning at Lake Erie and extending in the proportion to the Head of said river, which them and their posterity are to enjoy forever.” The proclamation was signed by the British with their allies, the Six Nations, after the American Revolution. Despite being the largest reserve demographically in Canada, those nations now reside on less than five percent of this original territory.
Faculty of Music Concerts & Events
Email - concerts@wlu.ca